The Playlist by Gary Garrison
It certainly succeeds in being a joyous, humane look at the role that school, education, and, most importantly, teachers have in the lives of such malleable minds.
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An observational documentary that follows John and Amanda, two inspirational teachers at an Irish boarding school who embrace both modernity and tradition, teaching Latin, English, and guitar. But as retirement looms, the two reflect on what comes next, and what will keep them young if they leave?
The Playlist by Gary Garrison
It certainly succeeds in being a joyous, humane look at the role that school, education, and, most importantly, teachers have in the lives of such malleable minds.
The A.V. Club by Josh Modell
Maybe it won’t exist in Ireland much longer either, so it’s a good thing that School Life manages to capture its weird, wonderful world.
Screen Daily by Fionnuala Halligan
Childhood is a mystery we endlessly come back to and a place the Leydens have never fully left; Ní Chianáin gives the viewer an intimate view of it in this unusual little story.
Time by Stephanie Zacharek
School Life is a bit woolly in its pacing, but the picture’s easygoing structure is part of its charm—it mimics, perhaps, the passage of time at Headfort itself.
Screen International by Fionnuala Halligan
Childhood is a mystery we endlessly come back to and a place the Leydens have never fully left; Ní Chianáin gives the viewer an intimate view of it in this unusual little story.
IndieWire by David Ehrlich
By highlighting sweet, indicative, or hilarious moments rather than tracing the teachers’ relationships with any particular students, the film is more attuned to the rhythms of Headfort than it is the people in it.
The Film Stage by John Fink
In Loco Parentis is a warm work of cinéma vérité.
The New York Times by Ben Kenigsberg
School Life is a loving portrait, primarily, of the inspirational educator couple, who command the respect of their students and always seem to know what a particular child needs to hear.
Variety by Guy Lodge
There’s considerable poignancy in the contrast between this eccentric pair’s mutual sense that their lives are winding down and the vast, still-unshaped futures of their young charges, but Ní Chianáin’s film largely resists sentimentality of the “Greatest Love of All” variety.
The Hollywood Reporter by Neil Young
A conventionally mounted tribute to a genial, decidedly British form of eccentricity.
Slant Magazine by Diego Semerene
School Life is unfortunately committed to keeping its subjects, especially Headfort’s students, at arm’s length.
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